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The Invesco KBW High Dividend Yield Financial ETF (NASDAQ:KBWD) advertises a distribution yield near 12%, roughly four times what a mainstream dividend ETF pays.

Designed to provide broad exposure to the Financials ETFs category of the market, the Invesco KBW High Dividend Yield Financial ETF (KBWD) is a smart beta exchange traded fund launched on 12/02/2010.

According to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), passive income generally includes earnings from rental activity or any trade, business, or investment in which the individual does not materially participate.

Not all that glitter is gold, and it is a good time to sell the glitter and buy something better instead.

Invesco KBW High Dividend Yield Financial ETF continues to underperform, lagging the S&P 500 by nearly 14 percentage points since Q3 2025. KBWD offers a compelling 13.4% yield and trades at just over 7x earnings but remains locked in a persistent downtrend. I maintain a hold rating as valuation alone is insufficient; technicals and macro headwinds, particularly interest rates and GDP growth, dominate the outlook.

Designed to provide broad exposure to the Financials - Broad segment of the equity market, the Invesco KBW High Dividend Yield Financial ETF (KBWD) is a passively managed exchange traded fund launched on December 2, 2010.

Global X SuperDividend ETF (NYSEARCA: SDIV), Invesco KBW High Dividend Yield Financial ETF (NASDAQ: KBWD), YieldMax TSLA Option Income Strategy ETF (NYSEARCA: TSLY), and YieldMax NVDA Option Income Strategy ETF (NYSEARCA: NVDY) each promise outsized income, but the sources and sustainability of those payouts vary enormously.

The Invesco KBW High Dividend Yield Financial ETF (KBWD) made its debut on 12/02/2010, and is a smart beta exchange traded fund that provides broad exposure to the Financials ETFs category of the market.

Double-digit yields make most serious investors, and they should be wary as there is a history of high-yield funds that are littered with products that paid eye-catching distributions for a few quarters before quietly eroding into irrelevance.

Monthly income above 12% sounds like a promise that usually comes with a catch. These three ETFs actually pay it, though each one earns that yield through a different mechanism, and each carries a different set of trade-offs worth understanding.
